Ways to Cut Your Insurance Costs
For many companies, insurance premiums represent one of the largest expenses on their books each year. Insurance costs are always a prime consideration when purchasing policies, renewing coverage, or choosing an insurance agent or broker.
“No two businesses are exactly alike, and no two businesses have identical insurance needs,” says the Associated Press. “Your cost for small business insurance will thus be affected by several factors, including the following:
The question is, how can you reverse the trend of ever-increasing premiums and start taking control of your insurance spending? How can you develop an insurance program that demands the best rates and coverage the market has to offer?
Let's look at some key strategies you can implement to better control your company's insurance costs.
Implement a Robust Risk Management Program
One of the most effective ways to reduce insurance premiums over the long term is to lower your company's risk profile. This means being proactive about identifying, assessing, and mitigating the various risks your business faces.
“Don't just sit back and let claims happen, plan for them and build processes to mitigate those claims where it makes sense. You probably already have some risk mitigation procedures in place, even if you don't know it,” says Kyle Dean, President & CEO of Dean & Draper. “Depending on what industry your company operates in, there are numerous techniques, processes, procedures and tools you can be utilizing to mitigate your risk and in turn, lower your insurance cost.”
Key components of a strong risk management program include:
By taking tangible steps to reduce risk, you demonstrate to insurers that your company is a better risk to insure, which can translate into lower premiums over time. A good insurance broker can provide risk management expertise and resources to help you build out your program.
Explore Alternative Risk Financing Options
For some companies, traditional guaranteed cost insurance programs may not be the most cost-effective approach. Alternative risk financing techniques allow you to retain more risk in a controlled way in exchange for potentially lower costs.?
Options to consider include:
The feasibility of alternative risk financing depends on your company's cash flow, risk appetite, and ability to manage claims. An experienced broker can help you model different scenarios and determine if one of these approaches could help you better control costs.
Partner with the Right Broker
Perhaps the single most important factor in managing insurance costs is working with a knowledgeable, proactive and consultative insurance broker such as Dean & Draper.
The right broker will invest time to thoroughly understand your business, risk profile and objectives. They will have deep expertise in your industry, broad market access to secure competitive terms, and will provide strategic risk management guidance.
Look for a broker who operates as an extension of your team, not just a transactional middleman. They should proactively present new ideas to drive down costs, enhance coverage, and make your insurance program a competitive advantage.
“A long-term broker partnership built on transparency, trust, and continuous improvement is key to optimizing costs over time,” advises Dean.
Require Insurers to Compete for Your Business
Insurance is a competitive marketplace, and your broker should make insurers compete aggressively for your business.
This means marketing your program to a wide range of carriers, maintaining centralized data on your risk and loss history, and pushing for the broadest terms at the best rates.
Your broker should provide a coverage and pricing comparison at each renewal so you can easily evaluate quotes and see how they were able to improve your program year-over-year.
If your broker doesn't provide this analysis, ask for it. Foster a dynamic where insurers must sharpen their pencils because they know your business is heavily shopped each year.
Manage Your Claims Proactively
How you manage claims when they occur has a direct impact on your insurance costs.
Delays in reporting claims, lack of communication with adjusters, and failure to document incidents can all lead to higher settlement costs.
This translates into higher premiums at renewal. To keep claim costs in check:
“Effective claim management, in partnership with your broker and carriers, will help you minimize claim expenses and negotiate the best renewal terms,” explains Dean.
Take Control of Your Insurance Costs
Insurance may be a necessary cost of doing business, but that doesn't mean it has to be uncontrollable. By implementing smart risk management practices, exploring alternative program structures, partnering with the right broker, making insurers compete, and staying on top of claims, you can take meaningful steps to reduce your company's insurance spending.
The team at Dean & Draper knows the challenges companies face in controlling insurance costs in a difficult market. As a leading insurance broker and risk management consultant, we are here to provide the expertise, analysis, and advocacy you need to get the best results from your insurance program.
Contact us today to discuss how we can help you drive down costs and make your insurance a source of competitive advantage.
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The recommendation(s), advice, and contents of this material are provided for informational purposes only and do not purport to address every possible legal obligation, hazard, code violation, loss potential, or exception to good practice. Dean & Draper Insurance Agency specifically disclaims any warranty or representation that acceptance of any recommendations or advice contained herein will make any premises, property, or operation safe or in compliance with any law or regulation. Under no circumstances should this material or your acceptance of any recommendations or advice contained herein be construed as establishing the existence or availability of any insurance coverage with Dean & Draper Insurance Agency. By providing this information to you, Dean & Draper Insurance Agency does not assume (and specifically disclaims) any duty, undertaking, or responsibility to you.? The decision to accept or implement any recommendation(s) or advice contained in this material must be made by you.